As Irma transitioned from a hurricane to a tropical storm, the cleanup effort across Florida begins, as residents try to pick up the pieces of what Irma left behind.

In Jacksonville, record-breaking flooding from Irma’s storm surge continues to affect the city. The National Weather Service says the flooding has exceeded the previous 1964 flooding caused by Hurricane Dora by at least a foot, as of Monday morning.

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Rescues are underway just south of Jacksonville. John Ward, the emergency operations manager of Clay County, says crews have pulled 46 people from flooded homes by early Monday and an undetermined number are still stranded as the area’s creeks and ponds are getting record flooding.

Jacksonville Sheriff's Office

Jacksonville Sheriff's Office

Ward says between 400 and 500 homes received severe flood damage but there have been no serious injuries or deaths.

Flooded streets, damaged homes are what Floridians from Jacksonville to Key West woke up to on Monday. City officials in Tampa are conducting a damage assessment on homes across the city. The hashtag ‘Recover813’ is being utilized on social media to help officials see the scale of damage caused by the storm.

City of Tampa

Images out of Polk County, Florida shows the devastation occurring as first responders attempted to go out into the storm. A sheriff’s deputy and a fire rescue paramedic became trapped in a patrol car after live electric wires fell onto it.

WESH

Sgt. Chris Lynne and James Tanner Schaill became trapped after they had dropped off an elderly patient at the hospital. It took power crews two hours to disconnect the electricity so the mane could escape the car.

Irma made landfall on Florida’s mainland on Marco Island with 115 mph winds. The damage from the storm damaged not just people’s homes and businesses, but also knocked out communication services to rescue crews. In the nearby city of Naples, 911 centers are now up and running, while non-emergency lines remain down.